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Master's Thesis from the year 2017 in the subject Politics - Region: Western Europe, grade: 1,0, University of Aarhus (School of Culture and Society), course: European Studied, language: English, abstract: This thesis explores the first phase of the revision of the European Union (EU) Blue Card Directive from June 2016 to June 2017. Out of the four EU labour migration Directives, the Blue Card aims to attract highly-skilled third country nationals to the EU and grants those admitted a favourable set of rights. In the revision, the European Parliament is for the first time fully involved as…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Master's Thesis from the year 2017 in the subject Politics - Region: Western Europe, grade: 1,0, University of Aarhus (School of Culture and Society), course: European Studied, language: English, abstract: This thesis explores the first phase of the revision of the European Union (EU) Blue Card Directive from June 2016 to June 2017. Out of the four EU labour migration Directives, the Blue Card aims to attract highly-skilled third country nationals to the EU and grants those admitted a favourable set of rights. In the revision, the European Parliament is for the first time fully involved as co-legislator for the Blue Card Directive. Existing research indicates that the European Parliament seeks to strengthen labour migrants' rights. In this context, this thesis asks the question to what extent the revision process offers the opportunity to strengthen Blue Card holders' rights. At the same time, strengthened rights for Blue Card holders inevitably result in an increase in the diverging treatment of labour migrants in the EU. In light of this ambivalence, this thesis aims to not only analyse opportunities for strengthened rights for Blue Card holders, but also to what extend the revision of the Blue Card Directive offers the opportunity to establish a higher standard of rights for labour migrants in the EU. This analysis shall complement academic literature that questions the practice of granting labour migrants in the EU different rights, but lacks of research on the manner in which the more preferential treatment of highly-skilled labour migrants is justified by actors in the European Commission and Parliament. This thesis uses a methodological triangulation approach of qualitative policy document and interview analyses. It finds that the Commission's proposal and the Parliament's involved Committees propose to strengthen Blue Card holders in several regards. At the same time, findings indicate that the perception about labour migrants' economic contribution, their perceived scarcity and their intended duration of stay determine the rights granted. The results suggest that a revised Blue Card might serve as a reference for all labour migration Directives and future initiatives regarding equal treatment and safeguards to protect permit holders from the loss of status. In terms of rights to family reunification, access to long-term residence and intra-EU mobility, the thesis' findings raise doubts whether strengthened rights can benefit labour migrants that are not categorised as highly-skilled or do not belong to a comparable category.
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